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In that same year, the JCI published its first proceedings of an annual meeting of the American Society for Clinical Investigation (ASCI; its 17th), including abstracts describing how to culture vaccine virus and features of recurrent hay fever, reinforcing the consistent theme of the scientific inq...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:The Journal of clinical investigation 2022-03, Vol.132 (5), p.1-2
Main Author: McNally, Elizabeth M
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:In that same year, the JCI published its first proceedings of an annual meeting of the American Society for Clinical Investigation (ASCI; its 17th), including abstracts describing how to culture vaccine virus and features of recurrent hay fever, reinforcing the consistent theme of the scientific inquiry of human disease (4). Moving through the near-century-long history of the Journal, the JCI published more work that relied on experimental nonhuman animal models, to the degree that some questioned whether the JCI was still publishing human clinical investigation. [...]reflecting the changing demographics in the United States, the younger generation of scientists is more likely to hail from diverse socioeconomic, cultural, racial, and ethnic backgrounds. Collectively, our Editorial Board has remarkably broad expertise, drawing from strengths in cardiology, oncology, vascular biology, transplantation, the microbiome, immunology, genomics, human genetics, population science, computational biology, artificial intelligence, gene therapy, clinical trials, and more.
ISSN:1558-8238
0021-9738
1558-8238
DOI:10.1172/JCI158458